Most stormwater is completely up to engineering judgement. If you and I were to design a site, we could potentially have a 20 - 30% difference in peak flows and runoff volume, and we would both still be correct.
Differences of Tc can vary from Kirpich, FAA, Lag method, TR-55 and on and on. Not to say any method is wrong, but if used correctly, a good stormwater engineer can maniplate his data to produce a shorter pre-developed Tc and a longer post-developed Tc. (Especially useful if you have to design to the Critical Storm) There-by saving his client money and still meeting regulations. In our City, we make it very clear as to which methods are acceptable so there is consistancy and ease of review. Hence, we currently use TR-55 methodology.
I dont have a specific example, and dont have the time to start one, but there are many, many different methods for doing stormwater calculations. The lastest and greatest is a methodology produce by Huff and Angel. Their rainfall depths for different storms are generally higher than the tradition ones introduced by Technical Paper No. 40.
I think, in all, were moving away from what this forum is based on. While Im sure this is all good info for those reading it, many probably dont give a hoot.